Well.
Whatever it is (or was), in 1776 if you were black you were 2/3's of one.
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So what did "men" mean in 1776?
Actually the term liberal did not exist as we know it...Well, it clearly didn't include liberal males...![]()
The signatories of the DoI were the most notable liberal males of all time.Well, it clearly didn't include liberal males...![]()
The signatories of the DoI were the most notable liberal males of all time.
I know how the word has been transmogrified. It was a joke.I agree, but while the term actually refers to liberty (against government tyranny) we now use it to refer to the party of government proponents.
You had to be willing to risk your own life and your own property and wealth to sign the declaration of independence. It means standing up for what you say you believe in. These people did not believe in a hand-out.
Well.
Whatever it is (or was), in 1776 if you were black you were 2/3's of one.
--
Well.
Whatever it is (or was), in 1776 if you were black you were 2/3's of one.
--
The signatories of the DoI were the most notable liberal males of all time.
If you were a free black man then you were a whole man, the word meant the same thing. If you were a black male slave then you were none, but the state of the man who owned you got to count you as three-fifths of a person for purposes of representation apportionment. Seems bizarre today, especially in light of our Declaration of Independence and our Constitution's preamble, but it was probably necessary to get the slave-holding states to agree to form the union.